Anima (???) relates to the Japanese origin of the animated art. The anime is directed at a wide audience and consequently a particular genre might have certain characteristics. The most common form of anime is televised or distributed on DVD and other mediums, either after broadcasting or directly as OVA.

Consoles and computer gaming sometimes contain sections or sceneries that can be called anime. The manga (??) is japonese for "comics" or "whimsical images". The manga evolved from a mix of ukiyo-e and occidental art forms and took on its present shape soon after the Second World War. Manga, apart from cover art, is usually released in monochrome, but it is usual to find intros in colored sections and reading from top to bottom and then from right to left, similar to the layouts of clear Japan.

In 2005, Manga was the financial representative of a 24 billion yen Japanese and a 180 million dollar United States dollar exchange rate. In 2005, Manga was the most rapidly expanding book category in the United States. The anime and manga shares many qualities, including: exaggeration (in relation to scale) of bodily traits to which the learner should probably direct most interest (known as "big eyes"), "dramatically formed balloons, velocity curves, and vocalistic, proclamatory typography...".

A few manga, a small part of the overall production, are transformed into anime, often in cooperation with theorist. Anime can also result from computer gaming. Favourite anime franchises sometimes contain full-length movies, and some have been translated into real-time movies and TV shows. The cumulated turnover of videosets ( incl. home consoles such as'Pikachu') currently monitors all licenses of PokerMon outside Asia.

Pokémon is the romantic summary of the Pocket Monsters trademark from Japan (?????????, Poketto Monsut?). Pokémon does not only refer to the Pokémon Francchise itself, but also to the 649 fictitious types that have appeared in the Pokémon press since the publication of the Pokémon White 2 and Pokémon White 2 series.

"Like the name of each single type, Pokémon" is the same in both sonar and plural; from a grammatical point of view, it is accurate to say "one Pokémon" and "many Pokémon" as well as "one Pikachu" and "many Pikachu". The fictitious figure Edward Elric (???????????), generally known as Ed (??, Edo), is the protagonist of Hiromu Arakawa's anime and manga full metal alchemist line.

Edward with the title "Fullmetal Alchemist" (??????, Hagane no Renkinjutsushi, letter "Alchemist of Steel") is the youngest state alchemist in the story of the fictitious land of Amestris. He has also been featured in other episodes of the show, among them videogames, inventive visual animation (OVAs) and easy fiction. There have been a number of articles in various different newspapers about Edward's personality.

In addition, his funny scenes were hailed as the best scenes in the show. A number of merchandising items have been published with Edward's picture, among them Keyrings and Charms. Anime Gunslinger Girl's stories were staged by Morio Asaka, featured by Madhouse Studios and featured by Bandai Visual, Marvelous Entertainment, MediaWorks and Madhouse Studios.

Featuring the first two manga books of the Gunslinger Girl Manga range, Yu Aida wrote and illustrates this anime game. These thirteen animated sequences were broadcast in Japan on Bandai Channel and Fuji Television from October 8, 2003 to February 19, 2004.

Playing in today's Italy, the show recounts young women transformed into a cyborg, educated as bombers by grown-up masculine "handlers" and fulfilling their mission against terrorist and gangster groups on a secret mission to a secret state authority. Hiroshi Ishiodori staged a continuation of the first anime serial, Gunslinger Girl -Il Teatrino-, which was inspired by Artland.

Adapting the third, forth and fifth volume of the manga over fifteen animations, the first thirteen are broadcast on TV and the last two are published directly on film.